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- Bioreporter abstract "Bioreporters are intact, living microbial cells that have been genetically engineered to produce a measurable signal in response to a specific chemical or physical agent in their environment. Bioreporters contain two essential genetic elements, a promoter gene and a reporter gene. The promoter gene is turned on (transcribed) when the target agent is present in the cell’s environment. The promoter gene in a normal bacterial cell is linked to other genes that are then likewise transcribed and then translated into proteins that help the cell in either combating or adapting to the agent to which it has been exposed. In the case of a bioreporter, these genes, or portions thereof, have been removed and replaced with a reporter gene. Consequently, turning on the promoter gene now causes the reporter gene to be turned on. Activation of the reporter gene leads to production of reporter proteins that ultimately generate some type of a detectable signal. Therefore, the presence of a signal indicates that the bioreporter has sensed a particular target agent in its environment.Originally developed for fundamental analysis of factors affecting gene expression, bioreporters were early on applied for the detection of environmental contaminants and have since evolved into fields as diverse as medical diagnostics, precision agriculture, food safety assurance, process monitoring and control, and bio-microelectronic computing. Their versatility stems from the fact that there exist a large number of reporter gene systems that are capable of generating a variety of signals. Additionally, reporter genes can be genetically inserted into bacterial, yeast, plant, and mammalian cells, thereby providing considerable functionality over a wide range of host vectors.".
- Bioreporter thumbnail Bioreporter.jpg?width=300.
- Bioreporter wikiPageExternalLink toxicity.
- Bioreporter wikiPageID "18964603".
- Bioreporter wikiPageLength "11640".
- Bioreporter wikiPageOutDegree "65".
- Bioreporter wikiPageRevisionID "536689601".
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Aequorea_victoria.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Aequorin.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Analyte.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Antimonite.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Arsenite.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink B_cell.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Bacteria.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Bioassay.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Bioluminescence.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Calcium.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Catalysis.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Category:Environmental_science.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Category:Genetic_engineering.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Cell_(biology).
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Chemiluminescence.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Chemotherapy.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Colorimetry.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Decanal.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Electrochemistry.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Environment_(biophysical).
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Enzyme.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Estrogen.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Excited_state.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Fluorescence.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Food_safety.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Gene.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Gene_expression.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Genetic_engineering.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Green_fluorescent_protein.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink HeLa.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Inorganic_compound.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Luciferase.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Luminescence.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Mammal.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Medical_diagnosis.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Microelectronics.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Microorganism.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Organic_compound.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Pathogen.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Plant.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Plasmid.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Precision_agriculture.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Promoter_(genetics).
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Protein.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Quantity.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Real-time_data.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Reporter_gene.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Sea_pansy.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Substrate_(chemistry).
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Toxicity.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Transcription_(genetics).
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Ultraviolet.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Uroporphyrinogen_(urogen)_III_methyltransferase.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink Yeast.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink File:Biolumplate.jpg.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLink File:Bioreporter.jpg.
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLinkText "bioreporter".
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLinkText "reporter elements".
- Bioreporter wikiPageWikiLinkText "reporter protein".
- Bioreporter subject Category:Environmental_science.
- Bioreporter subject Category:Genetic_engineering.
- Bioreporter hypernym Cells.
- Bioreporter type AnatomicalStructure.
- Bioreporter type Discipline.
- Bioreporter type Science.
- Bioreporter type Study.
- Bioreporter comment "Bioreporters are intact, living microbial cells that have been genetically engineered to produce a measurable signal in response to a specific chemical or physical agent in their environment. Bioreporters contain two essential genetic elements, a promoter gene and a reporter gene. The promoter gene is turned on (transcribed) when the target agent is present in the cell’s environment.".
- Bioreporter label "Bioreporter".
- Bioreporter sameAs Q4915238.
- Bioreporter sameAs m.04jm2f2.
- Bioreporter sameAs Q4915238.
- Bioreporter wasDerivedFrom Bioreporter?oldid=536689601.
- Bioreporter depiction Bioreporter.jpg.
- Bioreporter isPrimaryTopicOf Bioreporter.